Drug raids in Afghanistan choke off funding for Taliban

Marines with 1st Battalion, 23rd Marines, unload thousands of pounds of illegal drugs from a vehicle during interdiction operations in southwestern Afghanistan on May 9. (Photo by Lance Cpl. Robert Carrasco/Marine Corps)

A new Pentagon report highlights a notable trend: Expanded military operations and counternarcotics raids in southern Afghanistan have helped to decrease the cultivation of drugs used to fund the insurgency there.

The decrease was the most striking in areas where coalition forces have a strong presence, particularly in Helmand province, said the “Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan.” Nearly 20,000 Marines are deployed there as part of a 30,000-troop coalition force commanded by Maj. Gen. John Toolan, head of II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward) and Regional Command-Southwest.

A version of the report is released every six months, outlining the changing face of the war. The latest one, dated October 2011, said the growth of opium-yielding poppy has declined in Helmand three years in a row. I wrote about the previous report here.

The Pentagon attributed the drop in drug production in part to counternarcotics operations spearheaded by coalition troops, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the National Interdiction Unit, a U.S.-funded counter-narcotics law enforcement unit that includes Afghan personnel. It falls under the Afghan National Police’s counternarcotics forces.

Together, the organizations plan and conduct raids, especially in Helmand and Kandahar provinces, where the cultivation of poppy is common. Three major raids were conducted in Helmand this fall, resulting in the destruction of several major drug-producing hubs, the report said.

The second operation in Helmand occurred Sept. 26. Three more laboratories were destroyed, and coalition forces seized 13,057 pounds of morphine base, 2,855.7 gallons of morphine solution, 220 pounds of heroin, 7,216 pounds of sodium carbonate, 25 gallons of acetic anhydride, 6,270 pounds of ammonium chloride and processing equipment. The seizure was one of the largest ever made by combined forces in Afghanistan, the Pentagon report said.

The 470-member NIU was established by the DEA as a specialized tactical element of Afghanistan’s narcotics police. The DEA trained 48 additional NIU members at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va., this summer, the report said.

In a recent interview, Toolan told Marine Corps Times that coalition forces under his command also have stopped smuggling with helicopter-borne raids by special operators.

“With some of our special operations forces that are with us, we have conducted aerial interdiction using our helicopters and using our surveillance capabilities, both British and American,” he said. “When we identify movement across the desert, we can respond pretty quickly.”

“Each [major]hit has been somewhere between 1,000 and 3,000 pounds,” said Capt. Orion Jones, a CH-53D pilot with Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 463, in the release. “We pulled about 80 kilograms of refined heroin [on one stop]. That was a huge find.”